Search found 362 matches
- Mon 12 Oct, 2015 01:42:24
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Fu Manchu Article in Fortean Times
- Replies: 17
- Views: 98189
Have any copies reached the United States yet? [font=Times New Roman] [/font] Mine arrived late last week. It truly is a beautiful piece of bookmaking, with a striking jacket, and a very nice binding. Some of the essays do look rather scholarly, but some are more along the lines of what you would f...
- Fri 2 Oct, 2015 22:36:34
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Fu Manchu Article in Fortean Times
- Replies: 17
- Views: 98189
Hurrah! My copy arrived today, and a very handsome volume it is too. I have their two books about Baron Corvo and his followers, and I know they do quality work. As it's a limited edition, I would think it's a must-have for any serious Rohmer fan (even though I whinge about the cost of the shipping...
- Wed 2 Sep, 2015 22:00:51
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Fu Manchu Article in Fortean Times
- Replies: 17
- Views: 98189
A release date!!!
Yes, Strange Attractor Press has finally announced the release of Lord of Strange Deaths ! "500 copies, available only via Strange Attractor Press from 21 September." Needless to say, I have ordered it, though postage to the U.S. is an outlandish £15. :roll: "Forever associated with ...
- Tue 30 Jun, 2015 01:39:35
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: The 2015 Convention
- Replies: 20
- Views: 38817
- Sun 28 Jun, 2015 14:45:29
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: DW puts in his oar...
- Replies: 2
- Views: 7490
I love the idea that this might have been a spur to getting Three Inquisitive People published. I have no proof of this at all, but certainly--with three full-length novels already included-- Those Modern Musketeers didn't need any padding. We know that he never went back to anything he had written...
- Sat 13 Jun, 2015 14:54:38
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: Happy Birthday, Sir Christopher
- Replies: 15
- Views: 36129
- Thu 11 Jun, 2015 17:21:31
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: Happy Birthday, Sir Christopher
- Replies: 15
- Views: 36129
- Mon 1 Jun, 2015 22:19:09
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: Happy Birthday, Sir Christopher
- Replies: 15
- Views: 36129
- Wed 27 May, 2015 17:40:26
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: Happy Birthday, Sir Christopher
- Replies: 15
- Views: 36129
Happy Birthday, Sir Christopher
Yes, Christopher Lee, a/k/a the Duke de Richleau, is 93 today!
- Wed 20 May, 2015 01:55:42
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: DW puts in his oar...
- Replies: 2
- Views: 7490
DW puts in his oar...
On 22 December 1938, novelist/critic Howard Spring reviewed three new books in London’s Evening Standard, one being Agatha Christie’s mystery Hercule Poirot’s Christmas. In the course of the review--in addition to describing the book as “clumsy†and “overladenâ€--Spring “disclosed (1) the identity of the murderer, (2) the murderer’s motive, (3) nearly every detail of the trick by which the crime had been committed, (4) how the detective knew it.†[1]
John Dickson Carr, who at that time was secretary of the Detection Club (a mainly social group of mystery writers formed in 1930 or so), was deputized to write a letter of protest to the paper. He allowed that Spring could like or dislike detective novels as he chose, but to give away the solution to one “can scarcely be called legitimate criticism,†and was unfair both to readers and writers. The Standard published Carr’s letter on 4 January 1939, along with an additional article by Spring in which he stated “most detective fiction is nonsense and it is time someone said so.†[2]
Now the fat was in the fire! Over the next few days, some two dozen letters appeared, taking one side or the other. The only ones from writers, however, came from other members of the Detection Club, including Dorothy L. Sayers, denouncing Spring's attack. (Christie maintained a dignified silence.) Perhaps Spring looked around among his literary friends and acquaintances to see who might contribute something on his behalf. He had been among the guests at some of Dennis and Joan Wheatley’s parties; DW’s library had half a dozen of Spring’s novels, all inscribed. [3/4] Although Spring considered Edgar Wallace’s books “trash,†he had praised Wheatley’s thrillers (“Mr Wheatley...never lets you downâ€), and raved about his son-in-law’s book of poetry. [5]
When the Standard published three letters on Monday, January 9, one of them was from Dennis Wheatley. It took, however, the odd position that Christie’s sales were so great that the original review would not hurt them, and the publicity would only generate more interest in her work. (Was that the best he could think of on short notice?) He admitted that he himself had written some mystery stories--referring to the Crime Dossiers--but “I did at least give the public something different.†(Spring's published opinion of one of those: "It is not for me to criticize Murder Off Miami any more than it would be for an art critic to criticize the artist's haystack.") [6]
Just one brief letter appeared on January 10--either no-one was interested in pursuing the debate any further, or the Standard’s editors decided to terminate it. DW does not refer to the controversy in his autobiography (unless it was edited out when the last two volumes were crammed into one), and Carr only used it later as a humorous plot device in The Case of the Constant Suicides (1941). And there it ended.
Or did it? The single Wheatley book constructed like a traditional detective story, Three Inquisitive People, had been shelved in favor of The Forbidden Territory as his debut novel, and had been sitting idle for five years. It’s only a thought, but perhaps now he was more alert to the appeal such puzzles continued to have for readers. Later that year, it would be included in the first-ever Wheatley omnibus, Those Modern Musketeers. [7]
[hr]
[1] John Dickson Carr, writing in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, November 1970.
[2] This information is almost all courtesy of James E. Keirans, who wrote an entire article about the brouhaha recently for a magazine called CADS (Crime And Detective Stories - issue 69), and kindly said I could crib his piece for this site. Keirans is also the author of the new John Dickson Carr Companion, a guide to the works of that “Golden Age†writer.
[3] Phil Baker, The Devil is a Gentleman, 2009.
[4] Blackwell catalog for the sale of Dennis Wheatley’s library, 1979.
[5] Wheatley, Drink and Ink, 1979.
[6] Quoted in Martin Edwards, The Golden Age of Murder, 2015.
[7] "Nothing would have induced me to publish it as a separate volume at my normal new novel rate...because I do not consider it up to the standard of my other books. But...it does tell how the four friends originally met, which may interest people who have already read one or more of the other books and I gladly give it to you for nothing." (Hutchinson never made that mistake again...)
John Dickson Carr, who at that time was secretary of the Detection Club (a mainly social group of mystery writers formed in 1930 or so), was deputized to write a letter of protest to the paper. He allowed that Spring could like or dislike detective novels as he chose, but to give away the solution to one “can scarcely be called legitimate criticism,†and was unfair both to readers and writers. The Standard published Carr’s letter on 4 January 1939, along with an additional article by Spring in which he stated “most detective fiction is nonsense and it is time someone said so.†[2]
Now the fat was in the fire! Over the next few days, some two dozen letters appeared, taking one side or the other. The only ones from writers, however, came from other members of the Detection Club, including Dorothy L. Sayers, denouncing Spring's attack. (Christie maintained a dignified silence.) Perhaps Spring looked around among his literary friends and acquaintances to see who might contribute something on his behalf. He had been among the guests at some of Dennis and Joan Wheatley’s parties; DW’s library had half a dozen of Spring’s novels, all inscribed. [3/4] Although Spring considered Edgar Wallace’s books “trash,†he had praised Wheatley’s thrillers (“Mr Wheatley...never lets you downâ€), and raved about his son-in-law’s book of poetry. [5]
When the Standard published three letters on Monday, January 9, one of them was from Dennis Wheatley. It took, however, the odd position that Christie’s sales were so great that the original review would not hurt them, and the publicity would only generate more interest in her work. (Was that the best he could think of on short notice?) He admitted that he himself had written some mystery stories--referring to the Crime Dossiers--but “I did at least give the public something different.†(Spring's published opinion of one of those: "It is not for me to criticize Murder Off Miami any more than it would be for an art critic to criticize the artist's haystack.") [6]
Just one brief letter appeared on January 10--either no-one was interested in pursuing the debate any further, or the Standard’s editors decided to terminate it. DW does not refer to the controversy in his autobiography (unless it was edited out when the last two volumes were crammed into one), and Carr only used it later as a humorous plot device in The Case of the Constant Suicides (1941). And there it ended.
Or did it? The single Wheatley book constructed like a traditional detective story, Three Inquisitive People, had been shelved in favor of The Forbidden Territory as his debut novel, and had been sitting idle for five years. It’s only a thought, but perhaps now he was more alert to the appeal such puzzles continued to have for readers. Later that year, it would be included in the first-ever Wheatley omnibus, Those Modern Musketeers. [7]
[hr]
[1] John Dickson Carr, writing in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, November 1970.
[2] This information is almost all courtesy of James E. Keirans, who wrote an entire article about the brouhaha recently for a magazine called CADS (Crime And Detective Stories - issue 69), and kindly said I could crib his piece for this site. Keirans is also the author of the new John Dickson Carr Companion, a guide to the works of that “Golden Age†writer.
[3] Phil Baker, The Devil is a Gentleman, 2009.
[4] Blackwell catalog for the sale of Dennis Wheatley’s library, 1979.
[5] Wheatley, Drink and Ink, 1979.
[6] Quoted in Martin Edwards, The Golden Age of Murder, 2015.
[7] "Nothing would have induced me to publish it as a separate volume at my normal new novel rate...because I do not consider it up to the standard of my other books. But...it does tell how the four friends originally met, which may interest people who have already read one or more of the other books and I gladly give it to you for nothing." (Hutchinson never made that mistake again...)
- Sun 12 Apr, 2015 16:25:23
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: Heron Edition Illustrations
- Replies: 8
- Views: 15203
My own view is that, whilst there were some striking illustrations amongst the 48 (?) volumes, the vast majority were - as you say - appalling. Many of them look to me like the work of some drug-crazed art school drop-out. Given the rather nice overall appearance of the books, one might have though...
- Sun 29 Mar, 2015 13:35:04
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: Heron Edition Illustrations
- Replies: 8
- Views: 15203
By the way, Jim, is the Ian Fleming book a 007? I remember, as the Bond films appeared, the publishers would use the posters as their paperback covers. As the films only followed the books for the first four, I can't imagine what readers thought when they read something like Diamonds Are Forever an...
- Sun 29 Mar, 2015 02:26:40
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: Heron Edition Illustrations
- Replies: 8
- Views: 15203
- Tue 17 Mar, 2015 00:55:52
- Forum: Off-Topic
- Topic: Fu Manchu Article in Fortean Times
- Replies: 17
- Views: 98189
Amazon US has now listed the release date as May 6, 2014, while Amazon UK still gives a 2013 date. We'll see what happens next... Strange Attractor Press has a Facebook page, and when they recently promoted some item that was coming out (also long overdue by their own admission), I asked if there w...
- Sun 1 Feb, 2015 23:07:29
- Forum: General Topics
- Topic: Dennis Wheatley Podcasts
- Replies: 77
- Views: 1621810
To bring this discussion back to Dennis Wheatley it is interesting to note if you look at the original flyer for DW’s Library of the Occult, DW was initially going to include M R James’ Ghost Stories of an Antiquary as Volume 24. Volume 24 ended up being The Monk by Matthew Lewis and the M R Ja...